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President Donald Trump said on April 29–30, 2026 that the United States is "studying and reviewing" a possible reduction of its forces in Germany, posting the remark on his Truth Social platform.
The announcement follows a public spat with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz over Washington’s handling of the war in Iran and efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The US maintains the largest contingent of its European forces in Germany — roughly 36,000–36,400 active duty personnel as of December 2025 according to US Defense Manpower Data Center figures — and operates major hubs including Ramstein air base, US European Command and Landstuhl medical centre.
Trump has previously threatened troop cuts in Germany and criticised NATO allies for defence spending; earlier plans to pull forces under his first term were never fully implemented.
German officials say relations remain intact despite the exchange of barbs.
The White House and Pentagon declined immediate comment.
Analysts warn that any drawdown would have operational, political and alliance-wide implications for NATO deterrence, logistics and transatlantic cohesion at a time of heightened tensions over Iran and energy security.
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Deutsche WelleTrump threatens US troop cuts in Germany
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Ramstein and other US bases underpin American operational reach, logistics and casualty care; cutting troops in Germany would have concrete military consequences and likely prompt European efforts to reduce reliance on the US, reshaping NATO dynamics.







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